โNov-07-2013 05:11 PM
โNov-10-2013 01:51 PM
DryCamper11 wrote:Canadian Rainbirds wrote:
here is what happens in our rig when plugged into ANY GFCI.
Plug the rig into GFCI outlet (mains) when the breakers to the two GFCI protected circuits in the rig are on, the mains GFCI trips. Unplug from mains, turn off the two house breakers, plug in the mains GFCI, and all is well. Drove me nuts until I found this out.
If I read this correctly, the pedestal (mains) GFCI trips whenever your RV GFCI breakers are on, but the RV GFCI doesn't trip when you plug into non-GFCI protected power.
It's possible for two GFCIs installed in series to to interact, although its relatively uncommon. You might try replacing the RV GFCIs to check this.
It's possible you've got problem that's not sufficient to trip the RV breakers, but does trip the pedestal/mains. You could try temporarily replacing the RV GFCI with a normal breaker. If the pedestal still trips, you have problem on that circuit that the RV GFCI can't see.
It's possible you have one of the less common situations where turning off the breaker after the GFCI prevents the GFCI from tripping, although, I'd expect the RV GFCI to trip in that case. You didn't really say if the RV GFCIs ever trip.
โNov-10-2013 11:09 AM
โNov-10-2013 09:46 AM
โNov-10-2013 09:12 AM
Canadian Rainbirds wrote:
here is what happens in our rig when plugged into ANY GFCI.
Plug the rig into GFCI outlet (mains) when the breakers to the two GFCI protected circuits in the rig are on, the mains GFCI trips. Unplug from mains, turn off the two house breakers, plug in the mains GFCI, and all is well. Drove me nuts until I found this out.
โNov-09-2013 09:39 PM
dougrainer wrote:
Turn off all your breakers in the RV panel. Plug in the GFCI shore power pedestal. IF it does NOT trip, then your shore Cord/Transfer is OK. Turn on the 50 or 30 amp MAIN breaker in your breaker panel. If it does NOT trip the GFCI, then turn on 1 Breaker at a time until the GFCI trips. Once you have determined which breaker when turned ON trips the shore GFCI. either run your APU and then determine what outlets/appliances are ON that circuit. Then trace and disconnect each appliance or circuit 1 at a time until you find the problem. Doug
โNov-09-2013 05:45 PM
Bobbo wrote:
Generator bonding is a whole other can of worms. If you think this thread has been contentious, start a thread on bonded generators vs non-bonded generators.
โNov-08-2013 05:13 PM
โNov-08-2013 01:28 PM
DryCamper11 wrote:
This isn't all that uncommon. I've seen it also. My gen is wired that way (can't be changed) and my home-made automatic transfer switch switches the neutral as well as the hot lead. When running on the gen, the ground and neutral are connected. When running off shore power, they are separate.
โNov-08-2013 11:55 AM
KJINTF wrote:Thank you. So when the Surge Guard triggers, it connects the neutral, and any neutral to ground leakage anywhere in the RV will trip the park pedestal GFCI regardless of whether the RV breakers are on or off. Based on that photo, I'd be surprised if it was the Surge Guard causing the tripping.
This is the 50amp surge guard
โNov-08-2013 11:48 AM
โNov-08-2013 11:26 AM
โNov-08-2013 11:00 AM
โNov-08-2013 09:55 AM
Mandalay Parr wrote:
On one I helped fix a while back, the white and green wires were connected to the same buss bar at the power distribution panel.
โNov-08-2013 09:48 AM
Hondavalk wrote:
Wow you can learn something new every day. Had to see for myself and jumped the neutral and ground on a energized GFI and it tripped. :S
Also I agree with Chris and would start with the surge procetor.